Hindley Earnshaw and Edgar Linton are both weak, though there are
differences, Edgar is a good, honest, honourable man and Hindley is mean,
jealous, but both are weak, just in different ways- Hindley destroys himself
and, with drinking and gambling, brings about his own ruin, which Edgar doesn't
do, but he's still weak in character, shown by the way he deals with Heathcliff
and educates Cathy, passive in many circumstances. He doesn't have the strength
and firmness that can stop Cathy from going to Wuthering Heights. In a way, I
think Isabella Linton is stronger- in the sense that he still stays there
whereas Isabella leaves and goes away from Heathcliff's control and influence.
I agree with many people that Isabella is the true, or conventional, tragic romantic
figure of this novel, but personally I don't like her better than other
characters. Initially she appears nice, educated but boring, then, when
admitting to Catherine her love for, or rather, her infatuation with Heathcliff
and then not listening to either Catherine or Nelly, she becomes naive,
stubborn, irrational, impulsive and foolish, creating a different image of
Heathcliff in her mind.
In "Wuthering Heights" we can see doubles and opposites.
I myself would link Isabella with Cathy Linton. Cathy, in my opinion, has more
in common with her aunt than her own mother, which is not strange because
Catherine dies after giving birth to Cathy and Cathy is then brought up by
Edgar Linton, who grows up with Isabella. It's not told in detail, but there
may be certain similarities in the way Edgar treats his daughter and his
younger sister. Whatever the case, while also active, energetic and sometimes
selfish like her own mother, Cathy, very often, is naive, stubborn, irrational,
impulsive and foolish.
Now, in the middle of chapter 14 of volume 2, I do not wish to
comment on Hareton Earnshaw, Joseph and Nelly Dean for the time being, which I
may or may not do later depending on my mood, I may even change my mind about
Heathcliff when the love between Hareton and Cathy develops (well I knew the
story before reading this book), but at the moment the character that creates
the strongest impression on me is Linton Heathcliff, even though he's often
ignored in the list of characters. Emily Bronte has the talent to make the
characters come alive and appear so real. To me, Linton elicits even more
complex emotions than Heathcliff and Catherine do. When he 1st appears, he
strikes one as being pale, thin, frail, languid and effeminate. As the
story goes on, he moves from his mother's place to his father's (after
her death), the character develops. Sickly, morose, peevish, whiny,
selfish, passive, physically and mentally weak... Sometimes he makes me feel
sympathetic and sad for him because he, like other Lintons, is very weak, even weaker and sick all the time, and yet he has to live with and put up
with a cruel, domineering father like Heathcliff, who despises him and who
keeps calling him a worthless wretch. But sometimes I still feel sick of him,
of the way he cares of nothing and no one but his own suffering and doesn't want to do anything. I imagine Linton having a thin
voice, effeminate, perhaps a bit high-pitched, sounding very annoying. Just as
I feel Cathy is more similar to her aunt Isabella, Linton is also more similar
to his uncle Edgar than his own father Heathcliff, similar in the way that he's
very weak in both strength and character. I now and then have some pity for
him, dislike him without hating him, because I think, how can anybody be
cheerful when always sick and on the verge of dying? And Heathcliff treats him
so badly. Especially in the scene where he's outside the house, with Cathy and
Nelly, and later, seeing Heathcliff, Linton appears so pathetic and fearful, and in such health,
he can never run away the way
his mother has done.
However, I've changed my mind. Like other characters by Emily Bronte,
Linton's a fascinatingly colourful person. Once inside his house, no longer suffering
from heat, he changes. He says horrible things like "I can't stay with
her. I'll not stay, by myself. She cries so I can't bear it. [...] moaning and
grieving, all night long, though I screamed for vexation that I couldn't
sleep." And "... I sometimes think she can't speak for pain. I don't
like to think so! but she's a naughty thing for crying continually; and she
looks so pale and wild, I'm afraid of her!" Worse, he also says "He's
in the court, talking to Doctor Kenneth who says uncle is dying, truly, at
last- I'm glad, for I shall be master of the Grange after him- and Catherine
always spoke of it as her house. It isn't hers! It's mine- papa says everything
she has is mine. All her nice books are mine- she offered to give me them, and
her pretty birds, and her pony Minny, if I would get the key of our room, and
let her out: but I told her she had nothing to give, they were all, all
mine." It's most outrageous when Nelly asks about his feeling when he sees
Heathcliff beat Cathy, he says "I winked. I wink to see my father strike a
dog, or a horse, he does it so hard- yet I was glad at 1st- she deserved
punishing for pushing me..."
One may say, he doesn't know what love is, living with Heathcliff,
but he has more than a decade with his mother, who I don't think doesn't love
him. One may say, it's understandable that a person in sickness and pain thinks more of his own suffering. But whatever the case, Linton, like Heathcliff, is despicable and heartless; worse, he's petty, selfish and without any redeeming quality such as the ability to love. I believe, his heart has the darkness like Heathcliff's that doesn't lead to brutal and violent acts only because of his poor health and lack of strength.
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